Yolanda Polk (left) and her sister, Lucia Polk (right), walk towards a hilltop to take part in the spirit wheel ceremony.
— Nelvin C. Cepeda

OCOTILLO, Calif.  Rattling gourds and scattering acorn dust, a small clutch of Native Americans recently staged a sacred ceremony atop a tiny mesa on the eastern side of the rocky divide between San Diego and Imperial counties.

The late-morning gathering marked the emergence of a rare alliance.

Alarmed by the growing list of energy projects that are underway or proposed in both counties, three southwestern tribes — including San Diego’s Kumeyaay — are forming the first intertribal group to watchdog the work.

They say the wind farms and other developments threaten Native American sacred areas and other cultural sites, like those near the spirit circle where they held their ceremony. And they worry government regulators are looking the other way in an effort to fast-track construction.

“People think we’re all about gaming,” said Sycuan Chairman Daniel Tucker, moments after the ceremony. “But this issue is a lot bigger than that ever could be.”

Their concern heightened last week when the Obama administration stepped up its push for the construction of large-scale solar-panel farms, designating parts of California and the West “solar energy zones.”

Developers already plan to erect hundreds of wind turbines across East County, Imperial Valley and northern Baja California, similar to the giant machines that loom over the Campo Indian Reservation near Interstate 8.

Many of the industrial operations will span thousands of acres, rising on or near land dotted with Native American cultural sites, including prehistoric habitation areas and spots that the tribes have long treated as sacred.

The recent ceremony was held about 70 miles east of San Diego, in the desert near Ocotillo, where Pattern Energy wants to erect as many as 155 turbines on nearly 13,000 acres, most of it on federal Bureau of Land Management property.

Anthony Pico, chairman of the Viejas band of Kumeyaay near Alpine, agrees it’s important for the region to pursue new, greener forms of energy. He noted that Indian culture has long been known for its affinity with nature.

“We’re the first environmentalists,” he said. But the pursuit of that energy, he added, should not come “at the expense of our own heritage.”

The fledgling tribal group — dubbed the Intertribal Cultural Resources Protection Council — includes members of the Quechan, the Cocopah and at least several bands of Kumeyaay.

Pico and others said it marks the first time in recent memory, if not generations, that the desert tribes have come together over a single issue.

A chief aim of the group is to ensure that developers and government bureaucrats stick by state and federal environmental laws, which require detailed studies of cultural sites that might be affected by a project. In addition, the government mandates the protection of sanctified Indian burial grounds.

Tribal leaders point to the proposed windmill farm near Ocotillo as Exhibit A in why they’re worried.

They are concerned the BLM is under intense pressure from Washington, D.C., to back the project and may cut corners in an effort to break ground. The agency is expected to decide on the Pattern proposal by spring.